Since last summer, I have become somewhat addicted to reading Y The Last Man every month. I, for years, collected and read comics, and got away from it over the last few years. I’m not certain what drew me to this particular book, but it is quite good. Unfortunately, when I arrived at the store after work today to pick up this month’s issue, it was sold out. I’m guessing that means I’m not the only one who has noticed how good this particular book is. There hasn’t been a single bad issue yet. Frankly, it would make a fantastic movie as well, so I’m waiting to hear that it will be one.
Heh. I posted the above post, and then went looking on Google for more information about the comic. I found this page, which explains that the book has been optioned by New Line Cinema.
I went to see the SuicideGirls Live Burlesque Tour with an old friend and a new friend last night. It was a lot of fun, and they(the girls) seem to be having a genuine good time. Personally, I enjoyed the night quite a bit. I don’t think it was quite what some of the people that went were expecting, but most everyone seemed to really enjoy it. The finale, which included the use of chocolate syrup and whipped cream, was a sight to behold. Hint: If you don’t want syrup and whipped cream all over you, don’t get right up front for the show.
I definitely agree with Wes’s take on the whole binary nature of friend/not-friend status on social software networks. In fact, this is something that I have heard non-technical users complain about with regards to social software. There are different types of friends, and different levels of access that you are willing to allow people to your junk, whether that junk is professional or personal. I would like to think that someone would go that extra step in mapping these relationships.
iTunes Music Store RSS Generator Hell yeah. Now if they would just catch up to the rest of the ecommerce world with some sort of affiliate program, I would be quite happy.
I like the layout and columns of the Feedster Top 100 feeds much better than the Share your OPML Top 100 list. Everything you might want to do with one of those popular feeds is right at your fingertips.
Steven Johnson notes that his new book is shipping. He says, “In many ways, the tone of the book will be familiar to those of you who read Emergence – it’s popular science with a literary gloss.”
Emergence was one of my favorite five books that I read in 2003. It led me to read a few more books, and there are a couple still waiting to be read. So I am very much looking forward to receiving my copy of Mind Wide Open: Your Brain And The Neuroscience Of Everyday Life.
New bed = oversleeping. This is a bad thing from some perspectives, but it also tells me that my bed purchase and mattress choices were good ones. I can’t believe what a difference it makes. I will stop babbling about my new furniture now, well, after I tell you that the new dresser has made getting dressed in the morning a pleasure. Okay, I’m done now.
Andy’s Researching the 2004 Oscar Screeners shows just how far video sharing has come. This must be some truly scary shit for the movie folks. Now, let’s see if they have put the extra time they’ve had since the Napster explosion, and the lessons learned from the music folks, to good use in working through the problem. I mean, really, they need to look at their content distribution system very carefully here.
The one really huge difference here is that movies, far more than music, draw a premium price during their initial run. Meaning, you can go to a theater and see a movie, but you can't take it home until several months later. This definitely works against the movie folks when it comes to sharing. This time period where they create this "artificial" scarcity is also the time period where pirates are most likely to want the film. Obviously, the theater experience is supposed to be a premium viewing experience from a screen and sound perspective, but this is being eroded as time goes on and home theater gets better and cheaper. Theater owners who have been overcharging us for everything from tickets to popcorn may find themselves the first set of business victims of this new content sharing battle. After a film''s theatrical run, there is a long gap until it is commercially released as a for-sale product. The scarcity during this time period is even worse than the scarcity during the theater run, thus, sharing will continue during this part of the movie's lifecycle.
So really, the movie business has two issues where the music business had one. During the initial theatrical run and the ensuing time period until the commercial release of the movie on DVD, there is no legal way to take a film home, and so, sharing during this time period of a movie's life will still be an issue even once their equivalent of the iTune Music Store is launched. Of course the second problem is some sort of electronic distribution like the iTMS, and I have seen several companies working on this problem already. In all cases, they are going about things the way that pre-iTunes Music Store online music ventures were done, with Draconian DRM, limited access time, and no ability to burn to DVD or CD. I predict that these ventures will be equally unsuccessful as the early online music distribution was, and that they will have to come around a bit, despite the lessons learned in the music sharing battles, which, of course, continue even now with legitimate online music distribution only making partial inroads. They should cut out the middle man, and begin rethinking the way the distribute movies now, or the next few years will be even more painful for them than the last few have been for the music companies. It definitely looks like the hardware companies are well on their way to creating a device demand for this content.
I’ve updated the RSS feed for this site to include the full text of each post. I made this decision based on my own experiences using NetNewsWire. I would rather be able to peruse the entire entry via the newsreader, and I am guessing that others would want to do the same. Finally, I can only imagine that when I get an RSS reader for my Sidekick, I will want to be able to read full posts from it, as the overhead of then visiting sites would be a pain in the ass.
PalmSource stealth releases OS milestone If you were thinking about buying a PalmOS based device, you might want to consider holding off for the devices that support this new version, as it includes some really big leaps in their architecture.
So, I have been using Dave’s Share Your OPML site for about a week now, and I have to say that the idea is a great one. I have already discovered a bunch of feeds that I never knew existed by browsing the lists of subscriptions of people whom I respect or otherwise have some level of context for from the Web.
Having said that, there are a few things about the site that make it far less useful to me than it would otherwise be. First, it catalogs feeds by their URL, not by the URL of the parent site, at least as far as I can tell. As a result, it tells me that I am not subscribed to feeds that I actually am subscribed to, just not that particular version of the feed. This becomes more troubling as sites get three or four different feeds for different RSS formats.
The second issue is one easily fixed. When looking at people's subscription lists, the name of the feed/site links to the feed, as it should. However, there is no link in the listing to the actual site. I want this because I don't want to mess up my subs lists with sites that I won't want to have in my list. The ability to get to the site in one click makes it far easier for me to tell if I really do want to give a particular feed a try.
I guess the moral of the story with both of these issues is that RSS feeds are a part of a particular Web site. This application fails to close that loop, and treats the feeds just as feeds, as if there weren't greater context to the posts and information than just a feed. With a couple of adjustments, that feed to Web loop could be closed, and things would make a lot more sense.(to me)
Update: I just noticed that the Top 100 feeds list does link to each individual site rather than the rss file for the site, so, clearly, this is something that Dave could do, perhaps with an icon in each line item, in people's subscriptions lists.